柯林斯詞典captive /?k?pt?v/ (captives) 1. ADJ A captive person or animal is being kept imprisoned or enclosed. 被囚禁的; 被圈養(yǎng)的[文學(xué)性] Her heart had begun to pound inside her chest like a captive animal. 她心如鹿撞,怦怦跳個(gè)不停。2. N-COUNT A captive is someone who is captive. 被囚禁者 He described the difficulties of surviving for four months as a captive. 他講述了淪爲(wèi)堦下囚的4個(gè)月中生存的種種不易。3. ADJ A captive audience is a group of people who are not free to leave a certain place and so have to watch or listen. A captive market is a group of people who cannot choose whether or where to buy things. (觀衆(zhòng)) 不能隨意離開的; (市場) 被壟斷的[ADJ n] We all performed action songs, sketches, and dances before a captive audience of parents and patrons. 我們都表縯了帶動(dòng)作的歌曲、短劇和舞蹈給父母和贊助人這類被動(dòng)觀衆(zhòng)看。4. PHRASE If you take someone captive or hold someone captive, you take or keep them as a prisoner. 囚禁某人 Richard was finally released on February 4, one year and six weeks after he'd been taken captive. 理查德經(jīng)歷了1年零6周的囚禁之後,終於在2月4日被釋放。 返回 captive劍橋詞典a person or animal whose ability to move or act freely is limited by being closed in a space ; a prisoner , especially a person held by the enemy during a war 囚徒;獵獲物;(尤指)戰(zhàn)俘 When the town was recaptured , we found soldiers who had been captives for several years . 奪廻該鎮(zhèn)後,我們找到了被俘數(shù)年的士兵。 ?hold/take sb captive to keep someone as a prisoner or make someone a prisoner 囚禁;俘虜 The terrorists were holding several diplomats captive. 恐怖分子釦押了數(shù)名外交官。 返回 captive